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Results 19 resources
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Summary. Describes the adverse secondary effects of allowing confidentiality agreements in medical malpractice cases.
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Summary. Describes hospitals’ practice of double-booking surgeons to maximize revenue.
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Summary. Discusses developments in the issue of whether to regulate the practice of double-booking surgeons to maximize revenue.
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Summary. Describes legal limits on illegal promotional speech by drug company representatives.
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Summary. Exhorts academic medical centers not to put risk-management and reputational concerns ahead of the need to support clinicians who wish to provide care in epidemic zones.
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Summary. Describes the effects of publicly disclosing that physicians receive money from drug companies.
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Summary. Describes how commonly drug companies fail to adhere to obligations to disclose clinical trial results and how commonly they are willing to share clinical trial data. My collaboration with Dr. Miller is a direct result of my Safra fellowship.
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Summary. Describes how publicly disclosing drug company payments to physicians affects trust.
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Summary. Investigates strategies for regulating inappropriate faculty consulting relationships. This was my Safra project.
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Summary. Explores how liability concerns influence physicians to order tests that patients don’t need.
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Summary. Describes how commonly drug companies fail to adhere to obligations to disclose clinical trial results. My collaboration with Dr. Miller is a direct result of my Safra fellowship.
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Summary. Describes how common it is for patients’ primary physician to have taken payments from drug companies.
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Summary. Describes gaps in the oversight of problematic faculty consulting relationships. This was my Safra project.
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Summary. Provides recommendations to hospitals dealing with surgeons’ requests to double-book operations.
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Summary. Investigates factors that lead physicians to be untruthful with patients.
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Summary. Explores how liability concerns influence physicians to order care that patients don’t need.
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Summary. Explores how liability concerns influence physicians to order care that patients don’t need.
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- Journal Article (18)
- Report (1)